Kenesouk

Kenesouk is a location in Egyptian mythology, located approximately in Canada. Built on an island by Siamun and expanded by Egyptian settlers, the city developed into a large colony with shrines to the gods and the people of the settlement, and it defeated a rival Greek settlement.

History
Kenesouk was founded approximately 1000 BC by Siamun, a pharaoh of the Third Intermediate Period-era Ancient Egypt. Kenesouk led a force of several Egyptian colonists on a voyage across the Atlantic Ocean, and they built their colony off the coast of Canada on a western island. The settlement developed from a simple town center to a bustling city, including several monuments, houses, a temple to Set, a barracks, an armory, a market, watchtowers, and a lighthouse. The colony was later joined by Avso, an Egyptian military outpost on the island to the east, Egypt's second colony in the area. While Avso developed as a base specifically for military purposes, Kenesouk grew as a colony. The devastation of the nearby Greek colony let Kenesouk flourish for a few years, but it disappeared soon after, due to either attacks by Native Americans, famine, or disease.